Chance of El Niรฑo forming in Pacific Ocean may push global temperatures to record highs in 2027
One expert says 2027 could be even hotter than the last three years, which have been the top three warmest on record
Graham ReadfearnEnvironment and climate correspondent
Sat 7 Feb 2026 14.00 EST
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Weather agencies and climate scientists have pointed to the possibility of an El Niรฑo forming in the Pacific Ocean later this year โ a phenomenon that could push global temperatures to all-time record highs in 2027.
Both the US governmentโs National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Australiaโs Bureau of Meteorology have said some climate models are forecasting an El Niรฑo but both cautioned those results came with uncertainties.
Experts told the Guardian it was too early to be confident, but there were signals in the spread of sea surface temperatures in the Pacific that suggested an El Niรฑo could form in 2026.
The cycle of ocean temperatures in the Pacific โ known as the El Niรฑo southern oscillation (ENSO) โ is linked with extreme climate events around the world.
When warmer-than-average waters gather in the east of the equatorial Pacific and extend to the coast of the American continent, this is known as an El Niรฑo and tends to give global temperatures a boost and, in Australia, can be linked to drier and hotter conditions.
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The latest southern hemisphere outlook from Australiaโs bureau said this week: โSome models suggest the possibility of El Niรฑo development from June.โ The bureau cautioned this was a โvery long lead timeโ for predicting an El Niรฑo.
NOAA has also said โthere are growing chances of El Niรฑoโ but also pointed to uncertainty in the models.
Dr Andrew Watkins, a climate scientist at Monash University and the former head of long-range forecasts at the bureau, said: โWe have a lot of warm water stored up in the western tropical Pacific. Typically when the trade winds ease that will slosh back to the east and warm up the areas off South America.
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โThe models are going for that to happen over [the Australian] autumn, which is fairly much what youโd expect.โ
He said the โprecursors are thereโ for an El Niรฑo but it was too early to tell if the phenomenon would develop.
Associate Professor Andrea Taschetto, an ENSO expert at the University of New South Wales, said a current La Niรฑa โ where warmer waters are closer to Australia โ was coming to an end, and forecasting beyond that was difficult.
She said the chances of an El Niรฑo developing, or ENSO being neutral, in June to August was currently about 50/50 or โlike tossing a coinโ.
The past three years have each been in the top three warmest years on record for the planet.
Dr Zeke Hausfather, a research scientist at the US-based independent Berkeley Earth research group, said an El Niรฑo that formed in mid-2023 and lasted until around April 2024 had likely added about 0.12C to global temperatures in 2024.
โIf El Niรฑo develops later this year it will likely peak around November-January and primarily impact 2027 global surface temperatures, rather than 2026.
โThis is why I have predicted that 2027 will likely set a new record [for global temperature] if a moderate to strong El Niรฑo event ends up developing.โ
Watkins agreed if an El Niรฑo did develop it would more strongly impact global temperatures in 2027.
โI would be hesitant to bet against a hottest year on record,โ he said.
But he said global heating caused mostly by the burning of fossil fuels was now โso strongโ that it was โsimply overtaking year-to-year variability in terms of air temperatureโ.
โI donโt think we are surprised by anything any more,โ he said. โYou might not need a strong El Niรฑo to get these warmer temperatures.โ
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